Contents

Welcome to Beginners Grin and Dare It

Sometimes Genealogical research can be intimidating to a beginner. The object of this page is to simplify the process as much as possible including links to assist you in your new adventure

Gathering

Contact relatives for information. Begin the writing pyramid by starting with known relatives and, after gleaning the information they know, ask them for addresses or phone numbers of other relatives who might be helpful. If relatives say "I don't know anything", try the Rudyard Kipling approach "I keep six honest serving men (they taught me all I knew. Their names are What and Why and When and How and Where and Who." You might make your questions more specific such as: Who is oldest relative you can remember? Where did your family live? What funerals do you remember going to? How do you know this information? Do you have old letters or documents? Why do you think your family moved? What did your family do for a living? What religion do you think they were? Any war heroes?

Make it fun for a family night. Have a scavenger hunt asking the family to scatter and find certificates, bible records, any other documents relating to family; immediate and ancestors

Collect information from other sources, remembering that this information is only as correct as the sources used. You will always want to learn the sources used or double check in case the information has been passed down like the old telephone game we played as children where the last sentence is totally different than the first. You may wish to try some of the following websites.

Organizing

Getting organized can be likened to the creation of the world. In fact, the same verbs can be used in both processes. To avoid feeling overwhelmed this creation/organization process may be broken into six "days" of work.

Label each notebook and corresponding file folder with the surname of a grandparent respectively - that's four. These notebooks will be used for research and the file folders will be used for storing papers which may not be needed at the present time. Label the fifth file folder with the words "Book of Remembrance." There are many ways to organize your notebooks. One very simple way is to have alphabetical tabs where documents can be placed or new information as it is acquired.

DAY THREE and FOUR - GATHER and DIVIDE

1. Gather all your loose papers and documents.

2. Divide the papers into four file folders depending on the family to which it belongs. If you have a LOT of information, use boxes instead of file folders for gathering and dividing.3. Gatherinformation and papers from other relatives who have been working on genealogy.

4. Divide their papers by either "downloading" it into your computer or into one of your file folders.

DAY FIVE - ORDER

In each file folder place the papers in chronological order for ease of the thought process during the typing stage.

DAY SIX - CREATE

1. Choose a file folder and pick up the first paper.

a. Ask a question. Does this paper have information that needs to be typed into my genealogy program?

b. If the answer is "yes" type the information into your program and record the source. Then find a place for the piece of paper. "A place for everything and everything in its place."

c. The place for the paper could be in a plastic sheet protector and in the file folder for your future Book of Remembrance, or three hole punched and placed in your notebook for research, or paper clipped and put back in the file folder it came from (mark that it has been typed), OR in the circular file commonly called the trash can.

2. Repeat the creation process for each file folder.

DAY SEVEN - RELAX AND REVIEW

Enjoy the fruits of your labors.

Choosing

1. Choose a person or a family who may need further research.

2. Decide what information you would like to know. Record these goals on a research log.

3. Choose records to search which will help you achieve your goals. To help you do this, find a Record Selection Table for your state or country. See the United States Record Selection Table for an example.

CENSUS: In the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom, the census has proved to be a very useful tool in establishing a place of residence at a certain time for a family. In later years, the census is also valuable for locating entire families with accompanying birth years and other information. Generally speaking, the census began in the United States in 1790 and was taken every ten years. A fire destroyed most of the United States 1890 census, but the 1790 through 1930 censuses are now available for public perusal. In Canada the census began as early as 1851 and is available through 1911. The differing countries in Great Britain generally have the census from 1841 through 1901.

Heritagequestonline.com (this website is often accessed for free by obtaining a username and password from local libraries)

VITAL RECORDS: Vital records are records that deal with vital statistics, as in births, deaths, marriages, divorces or adoptions, and are important in establishing specific dates. The records also often contain other important family information such as parents names. The location of these records varies depending on the type of event and the year it occurred. Most birth and death records in the United States begin in the early 1900's with the exception of some states such as a few New England states, large cities and even other scattered counties throughout the United States.